
David Lammy claims he's shrugged off 'impostor syndrome'
In a spectacularly self-indulgent interview with LBC's James O'Brien, Lammy said he had shrugged off the 'impostor syndrome' which had dogged him his whole life until he was made a Cabinet minister.
His reign at the Foreign Office has seen a brutal man-made famine sweep across Gaza, while Britain continues to arm Israel, and the White House imposing tariffs on the UK as part of Donald Trump's war on international free trade.
READ MORE: 'He belongs in The Hague': Keir Starmer fiercely criticised over Gaza speech
Lammy's blunders include referring to Israel's plans to herd Palestinians into a concentration camp in Gaza as a 'sticking point' and referring to members of Benjamin Netanyahu's government as 'extremists' as UK-made arms still flowed to Israel.
On the other side, he has been criticised in the right-wing press for accusing Israel of breaking international law – which it obviously is, but that is not the official government line. He had to row that one back and blamed jetlag for speaking out of turn.
'Something just fell off my shoulders. There was this sense that I'm the right guy in the right job at the right time.'
@DavidLammy opens up to James O'Brien about having imposter syndrome at every stage of his life, until he became Foreign Secretary. — LBC (@LBC) July 25, 2025
In a statement on the collapse of Bashar Al-Assad's regime in Syria in December, Lammy seemed to reveal that he didn't know where the country was as he referred to the risk of it falling into anarchy 'like Libya next door'. In the same statement, he also referred to Sudan as being 'not far away', which is true if you think that a distance of almost 2000 miles means somewhere is reasonably close.
READ MORE: Kemi Badenoch: Pictures of starving children haven't shifted my support for Israel
Speaking on O'Brien's profoundly missable Full Disclosure podcast, Lammy said: 'I have, up until relatively recently, impostor syndrome at nearly every critical stage of my life and certainly, on a more personal level, at the moments in nearly every decade of my life struggled with anxiety.
He added: 'I literally walked into No 10, the Prime Minister asked me to be Foreign Secretary, I walked into the Foreign Office and – I'm going to get emotional again – and it just fell off my shoulders.
'I had arrived and there was a powerful sense that I was the right guy, in the right job, at the right time to do this and a certain kind of innate confidence in my ability to do this that has carried me through and continues to this day.'
Bully for him.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
an hour ago
- The Independent
Government asks body to consult on axing ‘discriminatory' minimum wage age bands
The Government has said it is pushing forward with plans to look at removing 'discriminatory' age bands for the national minimum wage as it extended the remit of the Low Pay Commission (LPC). It said the advisory body will consult with employers, trade unions and workers on narrowing the gap between the minimum wage rate for 18 to 20-year-olds, and the so-called national living wage – the UK minimum wage for workers 21 years and older. The LPC will also be required to put forward 'recommendations on achieving a single adult rate in the years ahead'. Chancellor Rachel Reeves said: 'To ensure the right balance is struck between the needs of workers, business affordability and the wider economy, the LPC is being asked to consult on several issues before recommending the new rates.' Last year, Labour committed to removing these age bands to create a 'genuine' national living wage, as part of efforts to bolster employment rights. Currently, the national living wage for workers aged 21 and older is £12.21. Meanwhile, the minimum wage for workers aged between 18 and 20 is £10. There is also a minimum wage for those aged under 18, and apprentices, of £7.55. The Government said the change to the LPC remit will also ensure it actively considers the cost of living in its recommendations for changes to the minimum wage which are next applied from April 2026. The LPC, which was founded in 1997, provides recommendations to the Government each October regarding how it believes the minimum wage should be changed. The Government ultimately sets minimum wage rates for the following April after this advice. Business Secretary Jonathan Reynolds said: 'Low pay drags down living standards for our workers and in turn hurts our high streets and local businesses. 'This Government's plan for change will put money back in people's pockets, with this new remit marking the next step in considering how we ensure a fair deal for our lowest-paid workers while maintaining a competitive economy that boosts businesses and their employees alike.' Baroness Philippa Stroud, chairwoman of the LPC, said: 'We are pleased to receive our remit from the Government. 'Already, since the beginning of the year, we have spent significant time speaking with workers and employers to understand the pressures in the economy and the effects of the most recent increases in the minimum wage. 'We have held a successful call for evidence and received detailed submissions from all sides.'


Times
an hour ago
- Times
Parents beat Labour's VAT on fees raid by paying £500m up front
Parents of children at Britain's leading private schools may have avoided Labour's tax raid by offering up fees in advance. Hundreds of millions of pounds in fees were paid upfront last year to avoid the 20 per cent VAT, which came into effect on January 1, analysis by the Daily Telegraph shows. Britain's top 50 independent schools received £515 million in advance fees last year, up from £121 million in 2023, according to research of the latest annual accounts at Companies House and the Charity Commission. • More than fifty UK private schools shut since Labour put VAT on fees By handing over school fees before Labour's deadline, wealthy parents may have avoided up to £103 million in VAT, with that sum expected to be even higher when taking into account all of the UK's 2,600 private schools. Parents at some schools tried paying up to five years' fees before the January deadline to dodge Labour's tax, the analysis shows. The large scale of advance payments could impact Labour's plan to raise revenue, tax experts have warned. However, the Treasury says that the Office for Budget Responsibility considered the use of prepayment schemes when making its forecasts for how much money would be raised by the VAT raid. Fees gathered from prepayment schemes, which are used to pay for one or more years of a pupil's education in advance, have risen across the UK's most expensive schools, including Brighton College, which recorded £50.1 million in total prepaid fees last year — an increase of £4.1 million from 2023. Only 86 of its pupils were covered by the school's prepayment scheme last year. That figure jumped to 819 last year as parents scrambled to beat the VAT deadline. Eton College collected £52.7 million in advance fee payments last year, up £16.6 million from 2023. At Winchester College, fees collected in advance rose from £4.4 million in 2023 to £19 million in 2024. Labour maintains that its tax raid is aimed at targeting Britain's wealthiest families and will raise more than £1.8 billion a year for state schools in ten years. However, with wealthy parents forking out large sums to Britain's most prestigious schools, it is the smaller private schools that are likely to be affected the most. The government predicts that 100 schools could shut over the next three years, with more than 50 independent schools already announcing their closures as a result of the policy, the Telegraph reports.


Daily Mirror
an hour ago
- Daily Mirror
Benjamin Netanyahu orders chilling 'Full occupation' of Gaza
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Monday evening that a decision has been made for the entire occupation of the Gaza Strip, including operations in locations where hostages are kept Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced on Monday evening that a full-scale occupation of the Gaza Strip is underway, including operations in areas where hostages are being held. The Prime Minister's Office sent a stark message to Lt.-Gen. Eyal Zamir, the Chief of Staff: "If this does not suit him, you should resign." This move follows prolonged ceasefire-hostage talks involving Israel, Hamas, and intermediaries in Doha and pressure on Israel to make peace with Hamas. Netanyahu's directive to seize the disputed region comes shortly after Hamas broadcast a video depicting several gaunt hostages pleading for help amidst a severe famine. Hamas has consistently called for essentials like food and water to be allowed into Gaza as a precondition for resuming dialogue. The Iran-backed militant group has dismissed reports of Israel's intentions to conquer Gaza, calling the threats: 'Repetitive, worthless, and have no influence on our decisions.' The statement follows months of negotiations in Doha involving Hamas, Israel, and international mediators who are seeking a ceasefire-hostage agreement. The group is insisting that hundreds of aid trucks must be allowed into the Gaza Strip before it will return to talks, despite ongoing international efforts to deliver supplies to Palestinians through routes that bypass Hamas' control. Over the weekend, Hamas released videos of visibly emaciated hostages, claiming they are starving amid widespread famine in Gaza.